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description

THIS HBR CASE STUDY INCLUDES BOTH THE CASE AND THE COMMENTARY. FOR TEACHING PURPOSES, THE REPRINT IS ALSO AVAILABLE IN TWO OTHER VERSIONS: CASE STUDY ONLY, REPRINT R0511X, AND COMMENTARY ONLY, REPRINT R0511Z.

John Dooley, BioSol's vice-president of strategic research, has been making a name for himself at the biotechnology company's offices in Ireland. He's been doing so well, in fact, that the firm has offered him a promotion to director of strategy at headquarters--in California. He's lived abroad before. In the 1980s, making a living in Ireland was tough: Jobs were scarce and unemployment was high. So John and his wife, Fiona, moved to Massachusetts, where John attended MIT. They were not alone; many of their friends and family members also moved out of Ireland then. John and Fiona enjoyed their time in Boston; they became active in a large expatriate community and established reputations in their professional fields. By 1999, however, the Celtic Tiger was running at full speed. The Irish economy was booming and the whole country seemed to be bursting with possibility. When John was offered a job at BioSol's Dublin subsidiary, he and Fiona moved home and never looked back--until now. The new promotion would give his career a huge boost, but accepting it would mean uprooting his family and becoming an expat again. Ireland's economy is going strong now, but what if it doesn't last? Should John cast his lot with his country or his company?

Commenting on this fictional case study in R0511A and R0511Z are Raj Kondur, the CEO of Nirvana Business Solutions in Bangalore, India; James Citrin, a senior director at Spencer Stuart in Stamford, Connecticut; Maurice Treacy, the director of biotechnology at Science Foundation Ireland in Dublin; Arno Haslberger, who teaches HR management at Webster University Vienna in Austria; and Sharman Esarey, also in Vienna, editor of the annual report of the Organization for Security and Co-Operation in Europe.

learning objective:

In this case, a manager at an Irish subsidiary of a U.S. biotech company is offered a promotion to a headquarters position. The reader has an opportunity to examine key considerations in the decision to take an expatriate job, including balancing career growth vs. family needs and comparing prospective growth opportunities in one's home country vs. those abroad. The reader also considers strategies to enable global companies to recruit and support expatriate managers effectively.